Gulf News

UN envoy Bin Omar holds meeting with Hadi in Aden

The UN Security Council says Hadi remains Yemen’s ‘legitimate president’

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Aides to Yemen’s embattled President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi say he has met with the UN envoy to the country for the first time since fleeing the rebel-held capital.

UN envoy Jamal Bin Omar has been struggling for months to resolve a crisis pitting Hadi against the Houthi rebels, who seized the capital in September and control much of the north.

The rebels placed Hadi and his Cabinet ministers under house arrest in January, but Hadi was able to flee to the southern city of Aden earlier this month.

The UN Security Council says he remains Yemen’s “legitimate president.”

The officials spoke

about yesterday’s meeting on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press. The UN and Gulf states have thrown their support behind Hadi, Yemen’s ousted president, and called on Al Houthi militia to stand aside for a transition plan.

The Security Council late on Wednesday called on all sides to settle their difference­s through “dialogue and consultati­on” amid fears Yemen is sliding towards civil war.

Hadi, who resigned last month after his residence was surrounded by Al Houthi fighters, escaped house arrest in Sana’a, the capital, and has resurfaced in the south.

He has retracted his resignatio­n and resumed his duties in Aden, formerly the capital of independen­t south Yemen.

Hadi seeks to rebuild a power base with loyal army units and tribal fighters.

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